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- members members members area | WordReference Forums
One is not necessarily correct over the others - member's area = an area of a member, belonging to a member - members' area = an area of members, belonging to more than one member - members area = an area for members That is exactly the problem I have been having so far
- I go to for on lt;the gt; training | WordReference Forums
If you have an activity that is commonly referred to as training, then "I go to training every day" is fine (For example, at one of my jobs, we had training sessions every Monday night It was commonn to say "We have training tonight ") If you re talking about training for a particular sport, or for overall fitness, we'd probably just say "I train every day " "I go for the training" could be
- faculty or faculty member - WordReference Forums
I often see people use the word 'faculty' to refer to a faculty member I have seen this used by Americans also Are 'faculty' and 'faculty member' both mean the same?
- founder member vs charter member | WordReference Forums
Thus, a founding member would be one of the charter members, but a charter member would not necessarily be one of the founders Google founder member and you will see it used in many places
- Relationship with to you - WordReference Forums
Hi! I'm filling the forms required to get a visa to go on vacation to the USA There's a question that reads "Who is paying for your trip? (that would be my dad) Relationship with this person" Would this be child, or parent? Then there's another question about who I'm going with (both my mom
- possible vs potential - WordReference Forums
How much close is the meaning of possible to the meaning of potential ? Taking an example from this interesting article: "Video games as a possible
- Belong to vs. work at vs. a member of - WordReference Forums
1) Do you belong to HR unit? 2) Do you work at HR unit? 3) Are you a member of HR unit? If I ask a colleague in my company about what unit is he or she working at, are these phrases all correct? If so, which is best and most polite? Thank you!
- Dear parents Parents [Capital letters?] - WordReference Forums
Should I always capitalize the word "parents" in informal letters or emails when use it with "Dear "? Are there any rules?
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